Economic Crises Accentuate Rural Poverty

By Mario Osava, IPS, 24 November 1999

RECIFE, Brazil, Nov 24 (IPS) - The impact of the financial crises in
Asia, Russia and Brazil accentuated rural poverty in Latin America and
the Caribbean in the past two years, turning around a positive trend,
according to the International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD).

Up to 1997, the number of poor in the countryside was shrinking,
not due to improvements in living conditions, but because they
moved to the cities, where they joined the ranks of urban
slum-dwellers, said Raquel Peña-Montenegro, director of the Latin
American branch of IFAD, a United Nations agency.

In the absence of economic growth, unemployment in urban areas grew,
and the rural exodus began to let up, with the subsequent upsurge in
poverty in the countryside, the Chilean economist and sociologist told
the Third Conference of Parties to the Convention on Combatting
Desertification, which runs through Friday in the northeastern
Brazilian city of Recife.

Today, the poverty rate in rural areas of Latin America averages
around 30 percent, she added.

Economic indicators show that rural poverty trends closely accompany
economic performance. That is especially true in Central America -
which furthermore was hit by hurricane Mitch in late October 1998 - as
well as Argentina, Brazil and Chile, she said.

Progress was rolled back even in countries with social safety nets
which extend to peasant farmers, said Peña-Montenegro, who cited the
example of Venezuela.

A correlation between ethnic background and extreme poverty can also
be seen in rural areas of Latin America, where poverty rates are much
higher among indigenous groups, said Peña-Montenegro. She pointed to
the cases of Central America, Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru, which have
large indigenous populations.

That situation arose from the history of physical and cultural
marginalisation which excluded indigenous groups from growth
trends and from an educational system that does not recognise their
languages, while their communally-owned land was expropriated when
the laws of white society were imposed.

Indigence is one of the most serious and widespread problems in the
countryside, where social infrastructure like schools, hospitals and
public transport found in the cities - whether adequate or inadequate
- does not exist. That only compounds the difficulty in reducing
poverty in rural areas.

Any productive investment in the countryside requires additional
investment in public services, urging even greater efforts from
governments which are under pressure to cut social spending as part of
structural adjustment programmes advocated by multilateral lending
institutions, said Peña-Montenegro.

The difficulties loom even larger in the case of indigenous
communities, due to ethnic and cultural reasons, she added.

But the UN official cited an initiative that emerged in Panama, where
indigenous groups organised and set up their own administration
recognised by the government, which negotiates programmes with it to
be implemented at a local level.

IFAD currently finances 47 projects in 24 countries in Latin America
and the Caribbean, with loans amounting to 574.7 million dollars. In
extending credit, the UN agency emphasises the gender perspective,
seen as another key aspect in combatting rural poverty.

That means, for example, that project activities must be scheduled in
such a way that women are able to attend, and that training courses
are offered near the homes of local residents, making them more
accessible to mothers.

Nor can projects involving rural production only focus on men, as in
the region there are three million female heads of households in rural
areas, said Peña-Montenegro.

Another error committed in the past was teaching animal husandry and
veterinary care only to men, when women rather than their husbands
tend to care for livestock.

The environment is another dimension addressed in projects approved by
IFAD, which must be granted technical assistance on the question.

The Convention on Combatting Desertification confirmed the methodology
used by IFAD, underlining that rural development must entail
comprehensive, not just agricultural, solutions, said
Peña-Montenegro.

The link between soil degradation, desertification and rural poverty
was frequently reiterated at the conference in Recife, a city located
in Brazil's impoverished, drought-stricken northeast, where arid areas
are in continuous expansion.

Also stressed at the two-week gathering was the role desertification
played in the emigration of 700,000 to 900,000 Mexicans a year to the
United States. A full 85 percent of Mexican territory is affected by
drought and threatened by desertification, the Secretariat of the
Convention reported.

May not be reproduced, reprinted or posted to any system or
service outside of the APC networks, without specific
permission from IPS. This limitation includes distribution
via Usenet News, bulletin board systems, mailing lists,
print media and broadcast. For information about cross-
posting, send a message to <wdesk@ips.org>. For
information about print or broadcast reproduction please
contact the IPS coordinator at <online@ips.org>.